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Topic 2.1 Molecules to Metabolism. Urea & Falsification of Vitalism Vitalism – theory the origin and phenomena of life are due to a vital principle, which.

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Presentation on theme: "Topic 2.1 Molecules to Metabolism. Urea & Falsification of Vitalism Vitalism – theory the origin and phenomena of life are due to a vital principle, which."— Presentation transcript:

1 Topic 2.1 Molecules to Metabolism

2 Urea & Falsification of Vitalism Vitalism – theory the origin and phenomena of life are due to a vital principle, which is different from chemical or physical forces.  Organic compounds could only be made with the help of a “vital principle”

3  1872 Urea synthesized artificially – first organic compound  NO Vital Principle involved  Evidence against theory of vitalism Scientist accept that processes in living organisms are governed by same chemical and physical forces as in non- living matter Hemoglobin still not able to be synthesized in lab

4 Urea  Nitrogen-containing compound w/ simple structure  Component of urine  Naturally produced when excess of amino acids in body, to remove nitrogen  Chemical reactions in liver, catalyzed by enzymes produce Urea  Transported to kidneys  urine  Artificially ammonia + carbon dioxide  ammonium carbamate  urea + water  100 million tons produced annually. Nitrogen fertilizer

5

6 carbon  15 th most abundant element on earth  Forms up to 4 covalent bonds with other atoms, allowing for complex structures  Forms single, double & triple bonds C

7 Carbohydrates Carbon, hydrogen & oxygen 2 Hydrogen:1 Oxygen Lipids Insoluble in water Steroids, waxes, fatty acids, triglycerides Triglycerides: fats if solid at room temp, oils if liquid

8 Proteins One or more chains of amino acids All amino acids contain carbon, hydrogen, oxygen & nitrogen 20 amino acids contain sulfer Nucleic acids Chains of nucleotides Nucleotides contain carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and phosphorous Deoxyribonucleic acid Ribonucleic acid

9 Functional groups Methyl Group Hydroxyl Group Amino Group Carboxyl Group Aldehyde Group Ketone Group

10 Ribose  C 5 H 10 O 5  5-membered ring with side chain  4 carbon atoms in ring, one in side chain  Carbons numbered starting with number 1 on right  Hydroxyl groups (OH) on carbons 1, 2 & 3 point up, down, and down respectively

11 Glucose  C 6 H 12 O 6  Six-membered ring with side chain  5 carbons in ring, one in side chain  Carbons numbered starting with 1 on right  Hydroxyl group (OH) on carbons 1, 2, 3, 4 point down, down, up and down  *** glucose in plants making cellulose: hydroxyl points up.

12 Saturated Fatty Acids  Carbon atoms form an unbranched chain  Saturated acids contain only single bonds  Usually between 14-20 carbon atoms  Carboxyl group at one end of chain  3-hydrogen atoms at other end  All middle carbons bonded to 2 hydrogen atoms

13 Amino Acids  Carbon in center of molecule, bonded to 4 different things  An amine group  A carboxyl group  A hydrogen atom  The R group, which is variable

14 Identifying molecules  Proteins contain C, H, O and N  Many proteins contain sulfur. Carbohydrates and lipids don’t.  Carbohydrates contain C, H, O, but No N  Carbohydrates contain hydrogen and oxygen in 2:1 ration  Lipids contain less oxygen than carbohydrates

15 Metabolism  The sum of all enzyme-catalysed reactions in a cell or organism.  A metabolic pathway is either a chain of events, each catalysed by an enzyme, or a cycle of reaction. http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-z5q_jRGpCR4/UZ- DCDTG6XI/AAAAAAAAANM/JJ1JZ-ub7JU/s1600/krebs-cycle.jpg http://staff.jccc.net/pdecell/metabolism/enzymes/feedback.gif

16 Anabolism vs. Catabolism  Synthesis of complex molecules from simpler ones  Monomers  macromolecules (amino acids  protein)  Condensation reactions where water is produced  Example: ? Breakdown of complex molecules to simpler ones Macromolecules  monomers (protein  amino acid) Hydrolysis reactions where water is consumed Example: ? http://www.anabolicsmall.com/images/anabolic-steroid- alternatives.jpg http://www.mariowiki.com/images/d/d6/Mariohammer.jpg

17 examples AnabolismCatabolism  Protein synthesis in ribosomes*Digestion of food  DNA synthesis *Cell respiraton  Photosynthesis*Digestion of complex carbon compounds  Synthesis of complex carbohydrates in dead organic matter by decomposers including starch, cellulose & glycogen


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